When two men live together they usually maintain a kind of shabby neatness out of incipient rage at each other. Two men alone are constantly
on the verge of fighting, and they know it. Adam Trask had not been home long before the tensions began to build up. The brothers saw too much of each other and not enough of anyone else.
For a few months they were busy getting Cyrus’s money in order and out at interest.
They traveled
together to Washington to look at the grave, good stone and on top an iron star with seal and a hole on the top in which to insert the stick for a little flag on Decoration Day. The brothers stood by the grave a long time, then they went away and they didn’t
mention Cyrus.
If
Cyrus had been
dishonest he had done it well. No one asked questions about the money. But the subject was on Charles’ mind.
Back on the farm Adam asked him, โWhy don’t you buy
some new clothes?
You’re a rich man. You act like you’re afraid to spend a penny.โ
โI am,โ said Charles. โWhy?โ
โI might have to give it back.โ
โStill harping on that? If there was anything wrong, don’t you think we’d have heard about it by now?โ โI don’t know,โ said
Charles. โI’d rather not talk about it.โ
But that night he brought
up the subject again. โThere’s one thing bothers me,โ he began.
โAbout the money?โ โYes, about the money.
If you make that much money there’s bound to be a mess.โ โHow do you mean?โ
โWell, papers and
account books and bills of sale, notes, figuringโwell, we went through Father’s
things and there wasn’t none of that.โ
โMaybe he burned it up.โ
โMaybe he did,โ said Charles.
The brothers lived by a routine
established by
Charles, and he never varied it. Charles awakened on the stroke of four-thirty as surely as though the brass pendulum of the clock had nudged him. He was awake, in fact, a split second before four-thirty. His eyes were open and had blinked once before the high gong struck. For a moment he lay still, looking up into the darkness and scratching his
stomach. Then he reached to the table beside his bed and his hand fell exactly on the block of sulphur matches lying there. His fingers pulled a match free and struck it on the side of the block. The sulphur burned its little blue bead before the wood caught. Charles lighted the candle beside his bed. He threw back his blanket and got up. He wore long gray underwear that bagged over his knees and hung loose around his ankles. Yawning, he went to the door, opened it, and called,
โHalf-past four,
Adam. Time to get up. Wake up.โ
Adam’s voice was
muffled. โDon’t you ever forget?โ
โIt’s time to get up.โ Charles slipped his legs into his pants and hunched them up over his hips. โYou don’t have to get up,โ he said. โYou’re a rich man. You can lay in bed all day.โ
โSo are you. But we still get up before daylight.โ โYou don’t have to get
up,โ Charles repeated. โBut if you’re going to farm, you’d better farm.โ
Adam said ruefully, โSo we’re going to buy more land so we can do more work.โ โCome off it,โ said
Charles. โGo back to bed if you want to.โ
Adam said, โI bet you couldn’t sleep if you stayed in bed. You know what I bet? I bet you get up because you want to, and then you take credit for itโlike taking credit for six fingers.โ
Charles went into the kitchen and lighted the lamp.
โYou can’t lay in bed and run a farm,โ he said, and he knocked the ashes through the grate of the stove and tore some paper over the exposed coals and blew until the flames started.
Adam was watching him through
the door.
โYou
wouldn’t use a match,โ he said.
Charles turned angrily.
โYou mind your own goddam business. Stop picking at me.โ
โAll right,โ said Adam. โI will. And maybe my business isn’t here.โ โThat’s up to you. Any
time you want to get out, you go right ahead.โ
The quarrel was silly but Adam couldn’t stop it. His voice went on without his willing it, making angry and irritating
words. โYou’re
damn right I’ll go when I want,โ he said. โThis is my
place as much as yours.โ โThen why don’t you do some work on it?โ
โOh, Lord!โ Adam said. โWhat are we fussing about? Let’s not fuss.โ
โI don’t want trouble,โ said Charles. He scooped lukewarm mush into two
bowls and spun them on the table.
The brothers sat down. Charles buttered a slice of bread, gouged out a knifeful of jam, and spread it over the butter. He dug butter for his second slice and left a slop of jam on the butter roll. โGoddam it, can’t you
wipe your knife? Look at that butter!โ
Charles laid his knife
and the bread on the table and placed his hands palm down on either side. โYou better get off the place,โ he said.
Adam got up. โI’d rather live in a pigsty,โ he said, and he walked out of the house.ย 2
It was eight months before Charles
saw him again.
Charles came in from work and found Adam sloshing water on his hair and face from the kitchen bucket. โHello,โ said Charles. โHow are you?โ
โFine,โ said Adam. โWhere’d you go?โ โBoston.โ
โNo place else?โ
โNo. Just looked at the city.โ
The brothers settled back
to their old life, but each took precautions against anger. In a way each protected the other and so saved himself.
Charles, always the early riser, got breakfast ready before he awakened Adam. And Adam kept the house clean and started a set of books on the farm. In this guarded way they lived for two
years before their
irritation grew beyond control again.
On a winter evening
Adam looked up from his account book. โIt’s nice in California,โ he said. โIt’s nice in the winter. And you can raise anything there.โ
โSure you can raise it.
But when you got it, what are you going to do with it?โ โHow
about wheat?
They raise a lot of wheat in California.โ
โThe rust will get to it,โ said Charles.
โWhat makes you so
sure? Look, Charles, things grow so fast in California they say you have to plant and step back quick or you’ll get knocked down.โ
Charles said, โWhy the
hell don’t you go there? I’ll buy you out any time you say.โ
Adam was quiet then,
but in the morning while he combed his hair and peered in the small mirror he began it again.
โThey don’t have any
winter in California,โ he said. โIt’s just like spring all the time.โ
โI like the winter,โ said Charles.
Adam came toward the stove. โDon’t be cross,โ he said.
โWell, stop picking at me. How many eggs?โ โFour,โ said Adam.
Charles placed seven
eggs on top of the warming
oven and built his fire carefully of small pieces of kindling
until it
burned
fiercely. He put the skillet down next to the flame. His sullenness left him as he fried the bacon.
โAdam,โ he said, โI don’t know whether you
notice it, but it seems like every other word you say is California. Do you really want to go?โ
Adam chuckled. โThat’s what I’m trying to figure out,โ he said. โI don’t know. It’s like getting up in the morning. I don’t want to get up but I don’t want to stay in
bed either.โ
โYou sure make a fuss about it.โ said Charles. Adam went on, โEvery morning in the army that damned bugle would sound.
And I swore to God if I ever got out I would sleep till noon every day. And here I get up
a half-hour before reveille. Will you tell me, Charles, what in hell we’re working for?โ
โYou can’t lay in bed
and run a farm,โ said Charles. He stirred the hissing bacon around with a fork.
โTake a look at it,โ
Adam said earnestly.
โNeither one of us has got a
chick or a child, let alone a wife. And the way we’re going it don’t look like we ever will. We don’t have time to look around for a wife.
And here we’re figuring to add the Clark place to ours if the price is right. What for?โ โIt’s a damn fine piece,โ
said Charles. โThe two of them together would make one of the best farms in this section. Say! You thinking of getting married?โ
โNo. And that’s what
I’m talking about. Come a few years and we’ll have the finest farm in this section.
Two lonely old farts working our tails off. Then one of us will die off and the fine farm will belong to one lonely old
fart, and then he’ll die offโโ โWhat the hell are you talking
about?โ
Charles
demanded. โFellow can’t get comfortable. You make me itch. Get it outโwhat’s on your mind?โ
โI’m not having any
fun,โ said Adam. โOr anyway I’m not having enough. I’m working too hard for what I’m getting, and I don’t have to work at all.โ
โWell, why don’t you quit?โ Charles shouted at
him. โWhy don’t you get the hell out? I don’t see any guards holding you. Go down to the South Seas and lay in a hammock if that’s what you
want.โ
โDon’t be cross,โ said Adam quietly. โIt’s like
getting up. I don’t want to get up and I don’t want to stay down. I don’t want to stay here and I don’t want to go away.โ
โYou make me itch,โ said Charles.
โThink about it, Charles. You like it here?โ
โYes.โ
โAnd you want to live here all your life?โ โYes.โ
โJesus, I wish I had it that easy. What do you
suppose is the matter with me?โ
โI think you’ve got
knocker fever. Come in to the
inn tonight and get it cured up.โ
โMaybe that’s it,โ said Adam. โBut I never took much
satisfaction in
a whore.โ
โIt’s all the same,โ
Charles said. โYou shut your eyes and you can’t tell the difference.โ
โSome of the boys in the regiment used to keep a squaw around. I had one for a while.โ
Charles turned to him
with interest. โFather would turn in his grave if he knew you was squawing around. How was it?โ
โPretty nice. She’d wash
my clothes and mend and do a little cooking.โ
โI mean the otherโhow was that?โ
โGood. Yes, good. And kind of sweetโkind of soft
and sweet. Kind of gentle and soft.โ
โYou’re lucky she didn’t put a knife in you while you were asleep.โ
โShe wouldn’t. She was sweet.โ
โYou’ve got a funny
look in your eye. I guess you were kind of gone on that squaw.โ
โI guess I was,โ said Adam.
โWhat happened
to her?โ
โSmallpox.โ
โYou didn’t get another one?โ
Adam’s eyes were
pained. โWe piled them up like they were logs, over two hundred,
arms and legs
sticking out. And we piled brush on top and poured coal oil on.โ
โI’ve heard they can’t stand smallpox.โ
โIt kills them,โ said
Adam. โYou’re burning that bacon.โ
Charles turned quickly
back to the stove. โIt’ll just be crisp,โ he said, โI like it crisp.โ He shoveled the bacon out on a plate and broke the eggs in the hot grease and they jumped and fluttered their edges to brown lace and made clucking sounds. โThere
was a
schoolteacher,โ Charles said. โPrettiest thing you ever saw. Had little tiny feet. Bought all her clothes in New York.
Yellow hair, and you never saw such little feet. Sang too, in the choir. Everybody took to going to church. Damn near stampeded getting into church. That was quite a
while ago.โ
โ ‘Bout the time you wrote about thinking of getting married?โ
Charles grinned. โI
guess so. I guess there wasn’t a young buck in the county didn’t
get the
marrying fever.โ โWhat happened to
her?โ
โWell, you know how it is. The women got kind of
restless with her here. They got together. First thing you
knew they had her out. I heard
she wore silk
underwear. Too hoity toity. School board had her out halfway through the term. Feet no longer than that.
Showed her ankles too, like it was an accident. Always showing her ankles.โ
โDid you get to know her?โ Adam asked. โNo. I only went to
church. Couldn’t hardly get in. Girl that pretty’s got no right in a little town. Just makes people uneasy. Causes trouble.โ
Adam said, โRemember that Samuels girl? She was
real pretty. What happened to her?โ
โSame thing. Just caused trouble. She went away. I heard
she’s living in
Philadelphia.
Does
dressmaking. I heard she gets ten dollars just for making one dress.โ
โMaybe we ought to go away from here,โ Adam said.
Charles said, โStill
thinking of California?โ โI guess so.โ
Charles’ temper tore in
two. โI want you out of here!โ
he shouted. โI want you to get off the place. I’ll buy you or sell you or anything. Get out, you son of a bitchโโ He stopped. โI guess I don’t mean that last. But goddam it, you make me nervous.โ
โI’ll go,โ said Adam.
In three months Charles got a colored picture postcard of the bay at Rio, and Adam had written on the back with a splottery pen, โIt’s summer here when it’s winter there.
Why don’t you come down?โ
Six months later there was
another card, from
Buenos Aires. โDear Charles
โmy God this is a big city.
They speak French and
Spanish both. I’m sending you a book.โ
But no book came.
Charles looked for it all the following winter and well into the spring. And instead of the book Adam arrived. He was brown and his clothes had a foreign look.
โHow are you?โ Charles asked.
โFine. Did you get the book?โ
โNo.โ โI
wonder what
happened to it? It had pictures.โ
โGoing to stay?โ
โI guess so. I’ll tell you about that country.โ
โI don’t want to hear about it,โ said Charles. โChrist, you’re mean,โ said Adam.
โI can just see it all over again. You’ll stay around a year or so and then you’ll get restless and you’ll make me restless. We’ll get mad at each other and then we’ll get polite to each otherโand that’s worse. Then we’ll blow up and you’ll go away again, and then you’ll come back and we’ll do it all over again.โ
Adam asked, โDon’t you
want me to stay?โ โHell,
yes,โ said
Charles. โI miss you when you’re not here. But I can see how it’s going to be just the same.โ
And it was just that way.
For a while they reviewed old times, for a while they recounted the times when they were apart, and finally they relapsed into the long ugly silences, the hours of speechless work, the guarded courtesy, the flashes of anger. There were no boundaries to
time so that it seemed endless passing.
On an evening Adam
said, โYou know, I’m going to be thirty-seven. That’s half a life.โ
โHere it comes,โ said Charles. โWasting your life. Look, Adam, could we not have a fight this time?โ โHow do you mean?โ โWell, if we run true to form we’ll fight for three or
four weeks, getting you ready to go away. If you’re getting restless, couldn’t you just go away and save all the trouble?โ
Adam laughed and the tension went out of the room. โI’ve got a pretty smart
brother.โ he said. โSure, when I get the itch bad enough I’ll go without fighting. Yes, I like that. You’re getting rich, aren’t you, Charles?โ
โI’m doing all right. I wouldn’t say rich.โ โYou wouldn’t say you
bought four buildings and the inn in the village?โ
โNo, I wouldn’t say it.โ โBut you did. Charles, you’ve made this about the prettiest
farm anywhere
about. Why don’t we build a new
houseโbathtub and
running water and a water closet? We’re not poor people
any more. Why, they say you’re nearly the richest man in this section.โ
โWe don’t need a new house,โ Charles said gruffly. โYou take your fancy ideas away.โ
โIt would be nice to go
to the toilet without going outside.โ
โYou take your fancy ideas away.โ
Adam was amused.
โMaybe I’ll build a pretty little house right over by the woodlot. Say, how would that be? Then we wouldn’t get on each other’s nerves.โ
โI don’t want it on the place.โ
โThe place is half mine.โ โI’ll buy you out.โ
โBut I don’t have to sell.โ
Charles’ eyes blazed.
โI’ll burn your goddam house down.โ
โI believe you would,โ
Adam said, suddenly sobered. โI believe you really would.
What are you looking like that for?โ
Charles said slowly,
โI’ve thought about it a lot. And I’ve wanted for you to bring it up. I guess you aren’t ever going to.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ โYou remember when
you sent me a telegram for a
hundred dollars?โ
โYou bet I do. Saved my life, I guess. Why?โ โYou never paid it back.โ
โI must have.โ โYou didn’t.โ
Adam looked down at
the old table where Cyrus had sat, knocking on his wooden leg with a stick. And the old oil lamp was hanging over the center of the table, shedding its unstable yellow light from the round Rochester wick.
Adam said slowly, โI’ll pay you in the morning.โ โI gave you plenty of time to offer.โ
โSure you did, Charles. I should have remembered.โ He paused, considering, and
at last he said, โYou don’t know why I needed the money.โ
โI never asked.โ โAnd
I
never told.
Maybe I was ashamed. I was a prisoner, Charles. I broke jailโI escaped.โ
Charles’ mouth was
open. โWhat are you talking about?โ
โI’m going to tell you. I was a tramp and I got taken
up for vagrancy and put on a road gangโleg irons at night. Got out in six months and picked right up again. That’s
how they get their roads built. I served three days less than the second six months and then I escapedโgot over the Georgia line, robbed a store for clothes, and sent you the telegram.โ
โI don’t believe you,โ Charles said. โYes, I do. You don’t tell lies. Of course I believe you. Why didn’t you tell me?โ
โMaybe I was ashamed.
But I’m more ashamed that I didn’t pay you.โ
โOh, forget it,โ said
Charles. โI don’t know why I mentioned it.โ
โGood God, no. I’ll pay you in the morning.โ โI’ll be damned,โ said Charles.
โMy brother a
jailbird!โ
โYou don’t have to look so happy.โ
โI don’t know why,โ
said Charles, โbut it makes me kind of proud. My brother a jailbird! Tell me this, Adam
โwhy did you wait till just three days before they let you go to make your break?โ
Adam smiled. โTwo or
three reasons,โ he said. โI was afraid if I served out my time, why, they’d pick me up
again. And I figured if I waited till the end they wouldn’t expect me to run away.โ
โThat makes sense,โ said
Charles. โBut you said there was one more reason.โ
โI guess the other was
the most important,โ Adam said, โand it’s the hardest to explain. I figured I owed the state six months. That was the sentence. I didn’t feel right about cheating. I only cheated three days.โ
Charles exploded with laughter. โYou’re a crazy son of a bitch,โ he said with affection. โBut you say you robbed a store.โ
โI sent the money back with ten per cent interest,โ Adam said.
Charles leaned forward.
โTell me about the road gang, Adam.โ
โSure I will, Charles.
Sure I will.โ